Diala Makki, Sandra Shehab spotted at Paris Fashion Week

Diala Makki, Sandra Shehab spotted at Paris Fashion Week
Short Url
Updated 30 September 2024

Diala Makki, Sandra Shehab spotted at Paris Fashion Week

Diala Makki, Sandra Shehab spotted at Paris Fashion Week

DUBAI: Lebanese TV host Diala Makki took to social media with a heartfelt message as she was spotted at Paris Fashion Week along with US Egyptian model Sandra Shehab.

The pair attended Lebanese designer Elie Saab’s Spring/Summer 2025 show separately, with Makki taking to Instagram afterwards to share a message about the current Israeli bombardment of Lebanon, which has killed more that 1,000 people over the past two weeks.

“I am a journalist yet I stare at a blank page and I am unable to write one coherent sentence. I have mixed emotions, I am sad, broken, angry but mostly broken hearted. I was in Paris filming with a Lebanese team who showed up every day with teary eyes and a heavy soul. Their strength was inspiring,” she wrote.




Lebanese TV host Diala Makki at the Elie Saab show. (Getty Images)

“I interviewed creative designers who refused to give up on the dream that there is a light at the end of the endless tunnel of darkness and uncertainty … all I want to say to my people is be strong, the world is watching us, God is protecting us … I pray for my south, my Beirut, every corner of my Lebanon,” she added.

Shehab also attended Saab’s show, for her part she showed off an all-black look, complete with a trench coat.

The New Jersey native came into the limelight in 2018 after appearing in Season 24 of “America’s Next Top Model.” Although she was eliminated in episode eight, coming in 8th place, she scored fans on social media for her portrayal of Muslim women on screen.




Sandra Shehab  attended Saab’s show, for her part she showed off an all-black look, complete with a trench coat.(Getty Images)

Saab unveiled his spring collection on Saturday at the Palais de Tokyo, showcasing a mesmerizing journey through the African savannah that felt fresh, vibrant, and completely devoid of tired clichés, according to the Associated Press’s Thomas Adamson.

Right from the start, Saab showed he wasn’t afraid to play with the safari staples—but with a twist. Safari suits, reimagined as roomy linen separates and sleek crepe jumpsuits, traded their usual khaki for the blazing red of fireball lilies, moody elephant gray, and the ochre dust of West Africa. It was a palette that brought the raw, natural beauty of the continent to life without falling into the predictable tropes. These looks weren’t the romanticized garb of the intrepid explorer; they were effortlessly chic, perfectly fitted for today’s cosmopolitan adventurer.


Renowned regional models star in Doja Cat’s latest music video

Renowned regional models star in Doja Cat’s latest music video
Updated 28 September 2025

Renowned regional models star in Doja Cat’s latest music video

Renowned regional models star in Doja Cat’s latest music video

DUBAI: US rapper and singer Doja Cat released a music video for her latest single “Gorgeous” over the weekend that featured a lineup of sought-after models.

Dutch Moroccan Egyptian model Imaan Hammam joins Mona Tougaard — who has Turkish, Somali and Ethiopian roots — and US Somali star Ugbad Abdi alongside other fashion heavyweights, with the cast rounded out by Alex Consani, Anok Yai, Irina Shayk, Yseult, Paloma Elsesser, Amelia Gray Hamlin, Alex Wek, Karen Elson and Sora Choi.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Doja Cat, whose real name is Amala Ratna Zandile Dlamini, also cast her mother, Deborah Sawyer, in the video, which recreates stereotypical makeup adverts from the 1980s and features models with bouffant hairstyles posing with lip gloss cases and mascara wands.

“Gorgeous” is the latest single from the singer’s recently released fifth album, “Vie,” which takes a detour into 1980s’-themed music. Rolling Stone magazine described the 15-strong track list as “an album full of pastels and neon and mega-cheese sax solos.”

On Saturday, Hammam took to Instagram to share a behind-the-scenes video taken during the shoot, where she is seen having her makeup applied before joining Doja Cat on set. It is not the first time the 28-year-old model has starred in a music video — in 2024, she featured in a video for “Imaan” by Sudanese Canadian poet, singer and songwriter Mustafa Ahmed, known as Mustafa.

The model is known for her love of music, art and culture and launched her archival project, Ayni, in February. The platform highlights significant contributions to Arab film, art, music and literature.

“Meet Ayni (@ayni.vault), an archive dedicated to the preservation and promotion of Arab artistic expression through ‘my eyes’,” Hammam wrote on Instagram at the time of the launch.

“Follow along as I highlight some of the most significant contributions to Arab film, art, music, and literature — both old and new — and celebrate the talented artists behind them. This project holds such a special place in my heart, and I hope you enjoy it just as much as I enjoy curating it.”

 


Franco-Tunisian duo bring smash hit burgers from Paris to Dubai

Franco-Tunisian duo bring smash hit burgers from Paris to Dubai
Updated 28 September 2025

Franco-Tunisian duo bring smash hit burgers from Paris to Dubai

Franco-Tunisian duo bring smash hit burgers from Paris to Dubai

Friends-turned-business partners Majed Mansour and Wissem Ben Ammar built Junk Burger on a simple premise developed during the pandemic: Strip the burger back to essentials. 

Involved in the restaurant industry since 2013, the Franco-Tunisian duo took the plunge and opened their own burger joint after experimenting with food during COVID-19.

Junk opened in Paris in 2021 and, following success there, the brand expanded into 17 locations across France and the UK — including a central London outpost that went viral on social media this summer. Now, the first branch in this region has opened in Dubai.

Mansour and Ben Ammar said the secret to their burgers was simplicity and consistency.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

“We focused on quality, flavor, consistency and a clear identity,” they told Arab News. “We never tried to please everyone; our goal was simply to deliver direct, unapologetic pleasure — the experience of a perfectly executed smash burger.”

In Dubai’s busy food scene, Mansour and Ben Ammar said Junk was able to stand out due to its unique and focused menu.

“At Junk, there aren’t dozens of options: just one burger, available in different patty sizes, with fries and our signature panko. This focus allows us to guarantee unmatched consistency and quality,” they explained. 

“Dubai is one of the most exciting, vibrant and ambitious food destinations in the world. It’s a city that embraces bold concepts, attracts people from everywhere and rewards ideas that dare to stand out.”

The two have plans to expand Junk further in the region, with their eyes on Riyadh, Abu Dhabi and Doha.

In addition to their burger emporium, they also co-founded Puffy, a cookie spot that aims to satisfy the sweet tooth.

“Puffy was born from the desire to offer something comforting and unique — big, gooey cookies paired with great coffee; a warm, generous experience,” they said.


Samar Maakaroun on creating brands in a multilingual, multicultural world  

Samar Maakaroun on creating brands in a multilingual, multicultural world  
Updated 28 September 2025

Samar Maakaroun on creating brands in a multilingual, multicultural world  

Samar Maakaroun on creating brands in a multilingual, multicultural world  

DUBAI: British Lebanese typography designer and creative director Samar Maakaroun is known for her multilingual approach to design.

This week, Maakaroun is speaking at the Innovation by Design Summit in Doha, hosted by sustainable property developer Msheireb Properties.

Maakaroun, the founder of design agency Right to Left, and her team were the minds behind the brand identity of last week’s seminal Together for Palestine charity concert in London.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

On the night, celebrities from around the world gathered to raise funds for Palestinian-led organizations including Taawon, the Palestine Children’s Relief Fund and the Palestine Medical Relief Service.

“I couldn't approach this with like, ‘OK, I'm going to, you know, do something super slick,’ because it’s just not right,” she said, noting that when it came to designing posters for the event “this is not about who’s singing on that day … this is about making space for people to feel safe.”

The agency eventually settled on a powerful poster that featured negative space.

“Just black and white, cheap to print, maximizing fundraising efforts and sort of saying that this is a time to create space. Everybody feels very strongly about this so the white space was used to hold people’s feelings and emotions on this.”

Maakaroun, who is fluent in three languages, is also a partner at leading international design firm Pentagram, which was founded in 1972.

“I have come across projects that sort of have a foot in the Arab world, a foot in the Latin word, English or French,” Maakaroun said of her 20-year career.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

“The issue when you have a second language is typically what people do in the GCC, is they create an English version, an Arabic version, and the bilingual version. What that means is you end up with three faces for one brand — so that’s not efficient,” she said.

“For me it’s important to actually create brands that represent  this hybridity in people,” she said.

“The purpose in every project that I do is to end up with one mark because that’s more efficient, that’s ownable and that is more memorable,” she added, referring to a “mark,” or one of three types of brands or logos found in brand identity creation.

Working from a dual perspective is a key part of her creation and ideation process — “typically some GCC clients come to the UK to do a brand identity, they work with a company that’s only English-speaking people, start designing (in) English and then the Arabic version ends up being a translation of the concept that perhaps works in English, (but) doesn’t work in Arabic, (because) the letters are completely different,” she said.

Maakaroun counts coining the first integrated destination brand for Dubai with M&C Saatchi in 2015 as part of her portfolio of projects in the Gulf region. She also launched Apple’s brand in Arabic across digital, retail and print in 2017 and was part of the process of launching ’s Diriyah City brand in 2019.

“When we create brand identities, we’re telling stories about who we are as people and what matters to us and what represents us … and for me, the key driver in my work is about representation.”

It is perhaps fitting then that Maakaroun took to the stage in Doha to discuss “The Language of Identity,” where she discussed what it means to work across several languages and cultures in her practice.

 


Princess Rajwa, Crown Prince Hussein celebrate the birthdays of Princess Iman and Princess Salma 

Princess Rajwa, Crown Prince Hussein celebrate the birthdays of Princess Iman and Princess Salma 
Updated 27 September 2025

Princess Rajwa, Crown Prince Hussein celebrate the birthdays of Princess Iman and Princess Salma 

Princess Rajwa, Crown Prince Hussein celebrate the birthdays of Princess Iman and Princess Salma 

DUBAI: Princess Rajwa Al-Hussein of Jordan and her husband Crown Prince Al-Hussein bin Abdullah paid tribute to his sisters, Princess Iman and Princess Salma, this week by wishing them a happy birthday and sharing a photo together on Instagram.

“Happy birthday to Iman and Salma, the kindest and most loving sisters,” the crown prince wrote on Instagram.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

In the picture, the royal couple stand at the center, with Rajwa, originally from , wearing a brown draped silk-blend shirt by Dries Van Noten, paired with off-white trousers. She completed the look with a choker adorned with dangling pink sapphires, called The Wave, from Emirati brand Ailes.

The sisters stood on either side of the couple.

Princess Iman opted for a burgundy long-sleeved blouse paired with high-waisted white trousers featuring oversized pockets, while Princess Salma chose a white shirt dress with rolled sleeves. 

Princess Iman and Princess Salma were born four years apart. Princess Salma was born on Sept. 26, 2000, while her elder sister Iman was born on Sept. 27, 1996.


‘Love is Blind Habibi’ earns International Emmy nomination

‘Love is Blind Habibi’ earns International Emmy nomination
Updated 27 September 2025

‘Love is Blind Habibi’ earns International Emmy nomination

‘Love is Blind Habibi’ earns International Emmy nomination

DUBAI: Netflix’s UAE-based reality show “Love is Blind Habibi” has been nominated for an International Emmy Award.

The fan favorite is competing in the non-scripted entertainment category, according to the International Academy of Television Arts & Sciences.

The nomination comes less than a year after the show’s global release, marking the first time the hit dating format was adapted for Arabic-speaking audiences.

“Love is Blind Habibi” centers around men and women hoping to get engaged and married, with one twist: They have never met their prospective partner in person and have only communicated through a wall.

This approach seeks to prioritize personality over physical appearance, with couples building a connection before meeting face to face.

In season one of “Love is Blind, Habibi” three couples became engaged. However, only one — Safa and Mohammed — made it down the aisle and tied the knot.

The first season of the US original earned a nomination in 2020.